BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    Ó






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          |SENATE RULES COMMITTEE            |                        AB 721|
          |Office of Senate Floor Analyses   |                              |
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                                   THIRD READING 


          Bill No:  AB 721
          Author:   Medina (D)
          Amended:  7/8/15 in Senate
          Vote:     21  

           SENATE EDUCATION COMMITTEE:  7-0, 7/1/15
           AYES:  Liu, Runner, Leyva, Mendoza, Monning, Pan, Vidak
           NO VOTE RECORDED:  Block, Hancock

          SENATE APPROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE:  Senate Rule 28.8

           ASSEMBLY FLOOR:  78-0, 6/2/15 - See last page for vote

           SUBJECT:   Student financial aid:  private student loans


          SOURCE:    Author


          DIGEST:  This bill requires public, private or independent  
          postsecondary education institutions and requests the California  
          Community Colleges (CCC) to disclose data on student loan debt  
          and to disclose specified information to students seeking  
          private student loans. 


          ANALYSIS:   Existing law requires a public, private or  
          independent postsecondary educational institution, except the  
          CCC, to make specified disclosures related to private student  
          loans in financial material and applications provided or made  
          available by the institution for the purposes of distinguishing  
          private loans from federal loans in individual financial aid  
          awards.  (Education Code § 69800)








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          This bill: 


       1)Requires public, private or independent postsecondary educational  
            institutions and requests the CCC to make available to the  
            public upon request and in a prominent location on its Web  
            site within 12 months of a completed academic year the  
            following information concerning graduates and student loan  
            debt:

               a)        The number of students who started as first-time  
               postsecondary students who started and received a  
               certificate, associates' degree, or bachelor's degree  
               during most recently completed federal award year of July 1  
               to June 30.

               b)        For each type of credential in a) above, the  
               number and percentage of students in a) who borrowed while  
               enrolled through any student loan program and total  
               principal borrowed in each of those loan programs.

               c)        For each type of credential in a) above, the  
               number and percentage of students in a) who borrowed while  
               enrolled through any federal student loan program and total  
               principal borrowed in each of the federal student loan  
               programs.

               d)        The average principal borrowed by the students  
               counted in b) and in c) above by each credential type, as  
               specified.    

       2)Requires all private, independent, and public institutions, prior  
            to certifying a borrower's eligibility for a private student  
            loan to inform the student of all unused state and federal  
            financial assistance.

       3)Requires an institution that does not participate in federal  
            student loan programs to inform the students of such and that  
            the student may be eligible for federal loans at a  
            participating institution.  The institution is required to  
            provide the student with information regarding the Cal Grants  
            and Federal Student Aid Web sites.







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          Comments

       1)Need for the bill.  According to the author, students and their  
            families need clear, timely, accurate and comparable  
            information on student financial aid to make the best  
            financial and educational decisions about which postsecondary  
            educational institution to attend.  This bill seeks to expand  
            financial aid information available to the student and their  
            families by requiring the postsecondary education institution  
            to annually report on cumulative student loan debt and inform  
            students of their unused state and federal student loan  
            options.

       2)Existing online tools.  Several federal online tools exist to  
            assist prospective college students in making informed  
            decisions about their postsecondary education options.  These  
            include the following:  

          a)   The College Scorecards.  In February 2013, the U.S.  
               Department of Education's (USDOE) College Affordability and  
               Transparency Center released an interactive college  
               scorecard, intended to provide information on a college's  
               affordability and value to enable parents and prospective  
               students to make informed decisions about which college to  
               attend.  According to the USDOE, the Scorecard highlights  
               key indicators about the cost and value of institutions  
               across the country to help students choose a school that is  
               well-suited to meet their needs, priced affordably, and is  
               consistent with their educational and career goals.  Each  
               Scorecard includes five key pieces of data about a college:  
               costs, graduation rate, loan default rate, average amount  
               borrowed, and employment.  USDOE reports that these data  
               will be updated periodically, and that they plan to publish  
               information on average earnings in the coming year. 
              
          b)   Net Price Calculators.  Federal law requires any college  
               that participates in Title IV financial aid programs to  
               post on-line "net price calculators" to help parents and  
               students determine the potential cost of different colleges  
               before they apply. This calculator allows students to  
               calculate an estimated net price of attendance at an  
               institution (defined as cost of attendance minus grant and  
               scholarship aid) based on what similar students paid in a  







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               previous year.  The net price calculator is required for  
               all Title IV institutions that enroll full-time, first-time  
               degree- or certificate seeking undergraduate students.  The  
               USDOE College Affordability and Transparency Center  
               provides a link to the net-price calculator for individual  
               colleges nationally.   

          c)   Financial Aid Shopping Sheet.  In 2012, the USDOE partnered  
               with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to develop  
               the Financial Aid Shopping Sheet to promote transparency in  
               student financial disclosures.  The Shopping Sheet is  
               designed to help students better understand the amount of  
               grants and scholarships they would receive from a given  
               institution, and the amount of loans an institution  
               recommends a student take out to cover out-of-pocket costs.  
                The Shopping Sheet is not mandatory, but the federal  
               government did ask institutions to voluntarily adopt the  
               Shopping Sheet beginning with the 2013-14 academic year.   
               To date, about 3,000 institutions nationally have agreed to  
               use the Shopping Sheet template, and many California  
               public, private and independent institutions including all  
               University of California and most California State  
               University campuses are listed among those institutions who  
               have adopted the tool.  

          d)   The College Navigator.  The National Center for Higher  
               Education Management Statistics (located within the USDOE  
               and the Institute of Education Sciences) is the primary  
               federal entity for collecting and analyzing data related to  
               education in the U.S. and other nations.  College Navigator  
               provides comprehensive information to compare colleges on  
               criteria that includes costs, majors offered, size of  
               school, campus safety, and graduation rates.

               Typically, institutions report student loan information  
               through the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System,  
               Common Data Set, and/or USDOE and are made available to  
               students and their families via the tools mentioned above.  
               This bill requires institutions to annually report  
               cumulative debt levels at the end of graduation for each  
               credential and loan program rather than reporting figures  
               for annual borrowing.

       3)Private student loans.  Private loans are not subsidized or  







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            guaranteed by the federal government, have higher, variable  
            market-based interest rates and charge guarantee fees, making  
            them more expensive and less favorable for borrowers than  
            federal loan options.  This bill seeks to minimize private  
            student loan borrowing by ensuring students and families are  
            informed about their state and federal aid eligibility before  
            an institution can certify students' request for private  
            loans.

       4)Related TICAS (the Institute for College Access and Success)  
            study.  According to a recent report, Student Debt and the  
            Class of 2013, issued by TICAS, statewide, 55 percent of  
            college seniors who graduated in 2013 had student loan debt,  
            with an average debt of $20,340 per borrower.  Nationally,  
            private loans are most prevalent at for-profit colleges, with  
            41 percent of their seniors graduating with private loans in  
            2012.  TICAS additionally notes that 47 percent of private  
            loan borrowers borrow less than they could in federal student  
            loans.  The report highlighted high debt and low debt states,  
            and California was noted as being among the low debt states.  
            Among its recommendations, TICAS advised the collection of  
            better college level data on student borrowing at the point of  
            completion including private loans for which little data is  
            reported and additionally supported the improvement and  
            promotion of federal tools and processes that provide more and  
            better consumer information throughout the college process.   
            The report specifically noted tools such as the College  
            Scorecard, the Net Price Calculator, and the Shopping Sheet.

          Prior Legislation
            
          AB 330 (Chau, 2014) would have required the California Student  
          Aid Commission and Bureau for Private Postsecondary Education to  
          post additional links on their Internet Web sites to provide  
          information such as net cost, financial aid, and student loan  
          debt that can be used by students and families to evaluate their  
          college choices. AB 330 died on the Senate inactive file.

          FISCAL EFFECT:   Appropriation:    No          Fiscal  
          Com.:YesLocal:   No


          SUPPORT:   (Verified7/14/15)








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          California Competes
          California Faculty Association 
          California Federation of Teachers
          East Bay Community Law Center
          National Association of Social Workers
          Public Advocates 
          The Institute for College Access and Success


          OPPOSITION:   (Verified  7/14/15)


          None received

          ASSEMBLY FLOOR:  78-0, 6/2/15
          AYES:  Achadjian, Alejo, Travis Allen, Baker, Bigelow, Bloom,  
            Bonilla, Bonta, Brough, Brown, Burke, Calderon, Campos, Chang,  
            Chau, Chiu, Chu, Cooley, Cooper, Dababneh, Dahle, Daly, Dodd,  
            Eggman, Frazier, Beth Gaines, Gallagher, Cristina Garcia,  
            Eduardo Garcia, Gatto, Gipson, Gomez, Gonzalez, Gordon, Gray,  
            Hadley, Harper, Roger Hernández, Holden, Irwin, Jones,  
            Jones-Sawyer, Kim, Lackey, Levine, Linder, Lopez, Low,  
            Maienschein, Mathis, Mayes, McCarty, Medina, Melendez, Mullin,  
            Nazarian, Obernolte, O'Donnell, Olsen, Patterson, Perea,  
            Quirk, Rendon, Ridley-Thomas, Rodriguez, Salas, Santiago,  
            Steinorth, Mark Stone, Thurmond, Ting, Wagner, Waldron, Weber,  
            Wilk, Williams, Wood, Atkins
          NO VOTE RECORDED:  Chávez, Grove

          Prepared by:Olgalilia Ramirez / ED. / (916) 651-4105
          7/14/15 18:31:54


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